Purpose: To assess the perception of patients undergoing cataract surgery under topical anesthesia in an open-space operating hall.
Methods: The study was set in the department of ophthalmology, Cochin Paris Descartes University Hospital, in a newly built open-space operating hall dedicated to ophthalmic surgery. It was a prospective study of consecutive patients undergoing cataract surgery by 11 surgeons. Our population study comprised 250 patients operated in an open-space operating hall with 3 surgical areas. Only first-eye standard cataract surgeries performed under topical anesthesia were included. Responses to a face-to-face questionnaire administered by a single interviewer to patients before their discharge on the day of their surgery were analyzed.
Results: Fifty-two patients (21%) knew beforehand that their procedure would take place in an open-space operating hall, 118 (47%) realized that they were in such an environment on the occasion of their surgery and 80 (32%) did not notice. Conversations and noises unrelated to their own surgeries were overheard respectively by 15 (6%) and 37 (15%) patients. Of the 250 patients, 237 (95%) did not report any discomfort associated with the fact that their procedure had been performed in an open-space operating hall.
Conclusions: Cataract surgery performed in an open-space setting did not seem to affect the patients' comfort during the procedure.
Keywords: Cataract surgery; Chirurgie de la cataracte; Espace ouvert; Open-space; Operating hall; Patients’ perception; Perception des patients; Salle d’opération.
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